‘Logic’ to help out
PUBLISHED: November 1, 2017
There are eight races at Greyville Racecourse today and Pure Logic, running in race seven, could offer punters some good value for their money…
Pure Logic, out of the money only twice in a dozen starts, can help punters out at a decent price when he lines up in the Itsarush.co.za Handicap on the Greyville turf today. It is a race where nothing is cut-and-dried with the ante-post favourite on offer at 5-2 but Pure Logic has that come-on look about him and off bottom weight, if not winning, should at least give a good account of himself.
His jockey, Jarred Samuel, is a hard-working and useful light-weight rider who makes the most of every bone that’s he’s thrown although there were a few grumpy punters last Friday with Blue Jasmin arriving at 55-1. “I knew she had improved in blinkers, but not by that much,” he laughed while being ragged by his colleagues yesterday.
Pure Logic will not start at those odds but the result could be the same although Dean Kannemeyer’s other runner, One Man Show, bidding for a winning hat-trick, is likely to be the more fancied of the pair.
Pure Logic has been lightly raced this year, this being only his fifth start and his fourth after quite a lengthy break and gelding. He was beaten a long way by One Man Show at Scottsville back in September but followed up with a much better effort behind Viento when back on the poly.
He’s returns to the turf today, has a light weight over his optimum trip and could have the measure of his more fancied rivals.
The dangers are many but Liquid Rainbow has not been out of the first two in his last five starts and can follow up on his narrow win on the poly when tried in blinkers for the first time. He goes equally well on the turf and with a handy weight should be competitive again.
Of the others, One Man Show has been racing over further, Saint Marco Goes the trip for the first time, Chrome Blue comes off a lengthy break leaving Roy Had Enough who should come on from his recent pipe-opener and will be more competitive over this trip.
In the opening leg of the PS, Kinsky’s Crusade may just have been short of peak fitness when returning from a break on the quick poly surface and can make amends in the second. Corrine Bestel’s filly had shown promise in a couple of competitive maiden fields before that and from a good draw and back on the turf looks the part.
If there is to be an upset it could come in the form of Dunzie who made an eye-catching debut for Duncan Howells and should come on lengths from that opening effort.
Blaze Of Gold has the worst of the draw in the first leg of the Pick 6 but has improved with every outing and should be good enough to beat home some well exposed older horses that include Asian Star and Mighty Mississippi, his most likely danger being Volcanic Sunset from the Sean Tarry yard.
Alraune has put in two smart efforts since arriving in KZN, first in a million rand feature and then a close-up second to the well-regarded Lady Val last time out. Barring a springer amongst the first timers, Gavin van Zyl’s filly looks a safe PA banker in the fourth.
Mark Dixon is never one to rush his charges and it pays dividends more often than not. The Dixon-trained She’s A Dream was a late starter but won well at second time of asking last month and can follow up in the fifth. Chamber Maid looks the most obvious danger but if this pair does not run up to expectations then things get difficult as there should be very little separating Just Rap, Noodle and Princess Analia while River Ayre pulled up lame last start but had more than useful form before that.
Zen Arcade was deemed good enough by Louis Goosen to make the trip to Turffontein this weekend for the Graham Beck Stakes so Ryker, a close-up second to Zen Arcade last time out, will have plenty of supporters in the sixth.
By Andrew Harrison
Attention to detail is key
PUBLISHED: October 31, 2017
Irish trainer Aidan O’ Brien broke a world record on Saturday when sending out his 26th Group 1 winner of the season,…
…having equalled the late American trainer Bobby Frankel’s previous record of 25 last weekend.
To most O’Brien is a neatly dressed, bespectacled man who is fortunate to train for the owners of Coolmore, which has become arguably the greatest stud operation in history.
However, an article written a couple of years ago by non-racing journalist Conor Pope highlights the incredible attention to detail, which goes into O’Brien’s operation.
On Saturday O’Brien’s charge Saxon Warrior won the Racing Post Trophy for two-year-olds over the straight mile at Doncaster under Ryan Moore.
The Japanese-bred colt by Deep Impact is duly favourite for next year’s Epsom Derby.
O’Brien first broke this record in 2001 with 23 Group 1 winners, but Frankel surpassed it in 2003.
The Ballydoyle farm O’Brien trains out of was made famous by the legendary trainer Vincent O’ Brien, whose purchasing and training skills played a large part in making Coolmore what it is today.
The main gallop at Ballydoyle is based on the turns and undulations of Epsom Downs racecourse, so it is hardly surprising Vincent won six Epsom Derby’s and Aiden O’Brien has already joined him on that number.
O’Brien said humbly to Pope, “I’m just a small part of a massive team. You can have the place and the horses but you need the team working together. It is all about the people.”
However, after reading Pope’s article a more accurate statement would be, “It’s all about the leader of the team.”
In the evening at Leopardstown racecourse, Pope was anticipating the first race, where O’Brien had a filly making her debut. O’Brien said, “I want her to think she’s the best.”
Pope elaborates, “He doesn’t think she’ll win but he wants her to enjoy the experience. She’ll win next time.”
However, before the filly runs, the horse in a neighbouring stall takes fright. O’Brien’s filly gets jumpy in turn. Watching from high in the stands, O’Brien is straight on the phone to his people on the ground. “Take her home. Take her home now and be gentle,” he tells them.
Pope wrote, “She’ll run again, but only when conditions are perfect. Because for O’Brien perfection is the goal. It might be impossible but there’s no one getting closer than he is.”
At dawn Pope had arrived at the stable complex where 40 jockeys, including all four O’Brien children, were getting ready to ride out on mounts selected for them the night before by the maestro trainer.
Pope notices the FM breakfast show booming from speakers hanging from the barn walls and asks O’Brien’s wife Annemarie whether the jockeys like the radio. “It’s not for them, it’s for the horses. When they hear it in the morning, they know it’s time to work. Then at around 12.30pm they’ll have lunch and the radio goes off and they’ll know it’s time to rest.”
O’Brien then arrives and comments, ““They’re really relaxed right now. But if something small changes, even a coat being hung in a different place, that can unsettle them.”
O’Brien gauges the horses’ moods as they pass by.
He is joined by Tom Curtis, who keeps a close eye on the horses’ vital signs using heart rate monitors strapped to their chests. He’s checking heart consistency and recovery rates.
But the monitors also tell Curtis what the horses are thinking. Horses are so sensitive to their surroundings and Curtis so tuned in to their sensitivities that if a horse is paired with a new jockey or is having a bad day for some other reason, the subtle shift in its heart rhythms will alert him.
O’Brien addresses each jockey by name. Every horse has a different schedule and O’Brien remembers their specific requirements without referring to notes.
“It’s just what I do,” he says when asked about his memory.
O’Brien’s in constant contact with jockeys and ground staff through walkie-talkies. The first gallop done, he addresses each rider by name again. “All good Aidan” they respond.
O’Brien leaps into his black Land Rover and races to another track. “I want to get there quickly,” he explains. “I don’t want the horses waiting. I don’t want them getting anxious.”
“It’s all about the horses. Always,” write Pope.
At this session O’Brien drives alongside, watching every muscle and sinew move. All sessions are taped and jockeys’ thoughts recorded as they dismount.
“The attention to detail is extraordinary,” writes Pope.
Later, O’Brien discusses horse psychology. “When you think something, they feel it. They’re remarkable. They feel everything. You can see the disappointment in their faces when they lose or when something’s not right. You’d pull a horse out of a race if his mood wasn’t right.”
They pass a colt having its morning shower.
“See how happy he is,” O’Brien says with a smile. “You can tell straight away if a horse is feeling down. He’s not feeling down.”
Later he points to top horse Gleneagles. He’s the only one with his bridle removed. “He likes it taken off as soon as he’s finished his work. None of the other horses want their bridle off. If we thought he liked being put in that tree over there, we’d do it, whatever they want, they get.”
There is also a horse spa on the farm, consisting of a treadmill and swimming pool, a cold salt water tank, a sauna and a solarium with heated lamps plus a vibrating plate to get horses’ legs warmed ahead of their go on a new underwater treadmill.
O’Brien also has a highly professional relationship with owners, the press and the racing public.
Those who have worked close to the like of Mike de Kock and Sean Tarry would have a similar story … it is attention to detail that separates the greats from the rest.
By David Thiselton
Search Party has the talent
PUBLISHED: October 31, 2017
There are big names stepping out at Kenilworth Racecourse today and Search Party has the talent to take them on…
The Play Soccer Pinnacle dominates today’s Kenilworth meeting – some big names return to the fray including the Mercury Sprint runner-up Search Party and Brutal Force who holds the course record for this 1 200m.
Indeed there is talent all the way down the line and the 14 runners boast 61 wins and 90 placings between them although only four have the advantage of a race in the past two months.
Al Mariachi has opened favourite at 11-2 and understandably so. This winner of the KZN Million on July day had stable companion Bold Respect (winner of a similarly valuable race on Met day) a neck behind on their reappearance at Durbanville and is now 3kg better. Bold Respect is a 7-1 chance with World Sports Betting and the sahorseracing computer has him finishing second to Al Mariachi.
“Both are a lot fitter than they were in that race and there is not much between them” says Brett Crawford who is also responsible for 10-1 joint top weight Search Party – “A good horse but it’s the start of his campaign and I think he will need it slightly.”
Justin Snaith also runs three, saying: “They are all nice horses but Sergeant Hardy (10-1) and Bishop’s Bounty (6-1) may need their runs. Heartland has had a race and is more ready than the other two.”
Heartland is the only one of the 14 to have run in this race 12 months ago. He finished last that day and had only two behind him when starting favourite the year before. This time he is one of the outsiders at 22-1.
Joey Ramsden has the biggest hand with four – 8-1 shot Brutal Force, 10-1 chances Macduff and Ancestry plus Attenborough who is quoted at 20-1. Ancestry is particularly interesting as he showed top form as a two-year-old even though he will almost certainly need further than today’s trip. Mayfair Speculators have bought into the colt.
Brutal Force is a cracking good horse and quite capable of overcoming both a three-month absence and joint top weight but perhaps the biggest danger to Al Mariachi is 8-1 chance La Favourari who has won his last four and has had a racecourse gallop – he smashed through the pens in the Matchem and covered the 1 400m at a brisk pace before being scratched.
Dual Merchants winner Tevez, eight-year-old veteran of 41 races and available at 10-1, is invariably a threat in this type of event. “He has had a gallop, he always runs well and I think he will do so again,” says Candice Bass-Robinson.
Lord Balmoral (12-1) has a bit to find at the weights while the gallant Power Grid has the most to do and is the complete outsider at 33-1.
In the first newcomer Perfectproportions opened 15-4 favourite but 9-2 Travel Guide’s experience may give him the edge. However don’t disregard London Spirit as the Kotzen runner has been backed from 11-2 to 4-1.
Red Ginger won pulling up last time and the 16-10 favourite can confirm placings with Leaves Of Grass in the next despite being 2kg worse.
By Michael Clower
Marshall scores with Tap O’ Noth
PUBLISHED: October 30, 2017
Tap O’Noth made it three out of four in a manner that confirmed Vaughan Marshall’s long held view that this could be the natural successor to William Longsword…
Only twice this century have the winners of the Cape Classic and what is now the Western Cape Fillies Championship both gone on to land that season’s Guineas races – but you might not want to bet against it happening a third time after events at Kenilworth on Saturday.
Tap O’Noth made it three out of four in a manner that confirmed Vaughan Marshall’s long held view that this could be the natural successor to William Longsword while fellow Captain Al product Snowdance didn’t just beat her 14 rivals, she annihilated them.
Her four-and-a quarter length winning margin was the biggest this Fillies Guineas prep has seen in more than 16 years, and at 15-1 she served up the race’s biggest shock since Andries Steyn stunned Cape Town with 66-1 supposed no-hoper Our Girl in 2006.
Bernard Fayd’Herbe certainly helped make Jack Mitchell and Gaynor Rupert’s day by producing a masterclass in how to overcome a bad draw. Admittedly he was helped by being on a free-running horse but how refreshing to see a positive approach instead of the usual easing back, tacking across and guaranteeing the leaders a ten-length start.
The trainers of some of the other fillies maintained that their jockeys gave him too much rope but Fayd’Herbe’s advantage was only two lengths early in the straight. From that point on, though, the Cheveley-bred left them for dead and, when her rider looked back 150m out, he was five lengths clear and still coasting.
He said: “I wanted her to extend them and show off her beautiful action. Another furlong isn’t going to be a problem and I think she will come on from this.”
Justin Snaith, winning this race for the fifth time and confirming that the WSB Cape Fillies Guineas will be next, added: “Every jockey that has got off her says she is the real deal. She has everything – pedigree, temperament, the lot.”
Even money favourite Magical Wonderland fared best of the rest but on this evidence she and all the others have a mountain to climb on the first Saturday in December.
Tap O’Noth’s victory might have looked ordinary by comparison but the 3-1 favourite quickened with real authority when asked and his connections are convinced that Alec and Gillian Foster’s years of dedicated breeding are set to reap a rich reward.
MJ Byleveld, also successful on Eighth Wonder in the 2015 Cape Classic, said: “I was caught a bit flat-footed at one stage but he was only gathering himself up. When he picked it up he ran to the line.”
Vaughan Marshall added: “He is one hell of a horse. The winter course and 1 400m was too sharp for him – a mile, possibly further, will be his trip. We will put him in the Selangor (18 November) but running him in it is not cast in stone.”
Undercover Agent was only beaten three-quarters of a length with Corne Orffer reporting: “This was too short for him. He needs a mile-plus and it will be a different story on the new course.”
A full-of-hope Brett Crawford added: “He will improve with racing – he is still a big baby and he never had cover. He could be better given more of a chance. He goes for the Selangor and the Guineas.”
Snaith is thinking of giving the Selangor a miss with Cot Campbell (third) and fourth-placed Sir Frenchie’s main target is not the Guineas but the R2.5 million of the Lanzerac Ready To Run a fortnight on Saturday.
Dutch Philip, last two furlongs out, ran on well to take seventh despite his near-impossible task at the weights and Candice Bass-Robinson said: “We didn’t learn much from that – he had too much ground to make up – but I think he could be a sprinter.”
Interestingly Aldo Domeyer is singing from much the same hymn sheet, saying: “He was only four lengths off them, giving away four and five kilos, but I think there are a lot of sprint races he could win.”
Copper Force, carrying the Etienne Braun colours, earned a tilt at the Queen’s Plate by landing the Pinnacle under Grant van Niekerk who has been stung by recent press criticism, particularly when it made its way onto Facebook. He hit back by going on to land a treble, taking his score from the last four Cape Town meetings to ten.
Guineas hope Eyes Wide Open pleased Glen Kotzen by keeping on to take a close-up fifth in the Pinnacle – “He was rated to finish five lengths off them yet he was only beaten two with the jock not hard on him. It’s the Selangor next.”
Not many people win on their first ride but Sivuylie (known as Levis) Kuse did just that on Gimme Katrina in the Work Riders’ Maiden. “I’m relieved,” declared the 34-year-old but he didn’t elaborate on whether this was because he had justified his own expectations or those of his boss.
By Michael Clower
Whisky Baron bound for Dubai
PUBLISHED: October 30, 2017
Whisky Baron will travel to Dubai where there is a three month carnival. He is back to work and will fly to Dubai in mid-December…
Whisky Baron is on his travels again, this time to Dubai where some of the rich prizes of the three-month Carnival are on his agenda.
Brett Crawford said: “He is back in light work and on a water treadmill. I hope that by the end of the week he will be under saddle once more and cantering.
“He will fly out to Dubai in mid-December. I am not sure when he will run but there are a lot of options between January and March.”
The Sun Met winner suffered the equine equivalent of a twisted ankle when being prepared for the Challenge Stakes at Newmarket earlier in the month and so could not be nominated for the big International meeting in Hong Kong on 10 December.
By Michael Clower













